cryogenics - meaning and definition. What is cryogenics
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What (who) is cryogenics - definition

STUDY OF THE PRODUCTION AND BEHAVIOUR OF MATERIALS AT VERY LOW TEMPERATURES
Cryogen; Low temperature; Cryogenically; Low-temperature; Low temperature physics; Low-Temperature Phenomena; Cryogenation; Low Temperature; Cryotechnology; Cryogenic; Cyrogenic; Cyrogenics; Kryogenics; Low-temperature physics; Revival (life); Cryophysics; Low Temperature Physics; Cryogenic temperature; Low temperatures; Draft:Cryogenicist; Cryogenicist; Draft:Low Temperature Physicist
  • This is a diagram of an infrared space telescope, that needs a cold mirror and instruments. One instrument needs to be even colder, and it has a cryocooler. The instrument is in region 1 and its cryocooler is in region 3 in a warmer region of the spacecraft (see [[MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument)]] or [[James Webb Space Telescope]]).
  • A medium-sized dewar is being filled with liquid nitrogen by a larger cryogenic storage tank.
  • Nitrogen is a liquid under -195.8 degrees Celsius (77K).
  • access-date=11 June 2015}}</ref>

cryogenics         
Note: The form 'cryogenic' is used as a modifier.
Cryogenics is a branch of physics that studies what happens to things at extremely low temperatures.
N-PLURAL
cryogenics         
[?kr???(?)'d??n?ks]
¦ plural noun [treated as sing.] the branch of physics concerned with the production and effects of very low temperatures.
?another term for cryonics.
Derivatives
cryogenic adjective
cryogenically adverb
cryogen         
['kr???(?)d?(?)n]
¦ noun a substance used to produce very low temperatures.

Wikipedia

Cryogenics

In physics, cryogenics is the production and behaviour of materials at very low temperatures.

The 13th IIR International Congress of Refrigeration (held in Washington DC in 1971) endorsed a universal definition of "cryogenics" and "cryogenic" by accepting a threshold of 120 K (or –153 °C) to distinguish these terms from the conventional refrigeration. This is a logical dividing line, since the normal boiling points of the so-called permanent gases (such as helium, hydrogen, neon, nitrogen, oxygen, and normal air) lie below 120K while the Freon refrigerants, hydrocarbons, and other common refrigerants have boiling points above 120K. The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology considers the field of cryogenics as that involving temperatures below -153 Celsius (120K; -243.4 Fahrenheit)

Discovery of superconducting materials with critical temperatures significantly above the boiling point of nitrogen has provided new interest in reliable, low cost methods of producing high temperature cryogenic refrigeration. The term "high temperature cryogenic" describes temperatures ranging from above the boiling point of liquid nitrogen, −195.79 °C (77.36 K; −320.42 °F), up to −50 °C (223 K; −58 °F).

Cryogenicists use the Kelvin or Rankine temperature scale, both of which measure from absolute zero, rather than more usual scales such as Celsius which measures from the freezing point of water at sea level or Fahrenheit which measures from the freezing point of a particular brine solution at sea level.

Examples of use of cryogenics
1. There are also 10 private cryogenics banks in Greece.
2. STEM CELLS Thessaloniki gets cryogenics bank Greece’s second state cryogenics bank is to be set up within Thessaloniki’s Papageorgiou Hospital, Deputy Health Minister Thanassis Yiannopoulos said yesterday.
3. The controversial practice of cryonics, which is often mistakenly called cryogenics, involves "freezing" people in the hope that one day they will be brought back to life.
4. Mr Martinot‘s father showed his wife‘s body to tourists In 1'84 his father Raymond, a cryogenics enthusiast, froze his wife upon her death hoping that one day science might enable her to be resuscitated.
5. Given the legislative time he might have devoted to this but chose instead to lavish on things such as the war, or, at the other end of the scale, those interminable and fundamentally lightweight debates about foxhunting and smacking, one has to hope he has a good contact in the cryogenics industry.